This page lists articles from technology publications which show how
these technologies are being marketed in commercial form, and have also
been and are being used to harass covert weapons testing victims:

The reader is asked to remember that ANNOUNCED inventions with potential
for "national security" use are ALWAYS already in use covertly when announced.
The SR-71 "Blackbird" surveillance aircraft was in use for many years before
the public saw it.

This page lists articles from technology publications which show how
these technologies are being used to harass covert weapons testing victims,
and are now coming out in commercial form, or have been announced to the
public:

This article by Bruce Nordwall (Washington bureau) describes research
being carried on by the USAF Wright Laboratory at Dayton Ohio. The article
describes the use of MODULATED radar signals to produce AUDIBLE SOUND within
the brains of birds near airport runways to cause them to fly away and
avoid collisions with landing aircraft.

Other references on work with animals or humans with "audible microwaves":

This list was furnished by the lab at Wright- Patterson Air Force Base
where this type of unclassified development is now in progress.

** The transmission via MODULATED microwave pulses carrying voices to
selected weapons testing victims has been carried on for more than two
decades, as reported by the victims. There has been little published about
this phenomenon, and since direct-to-skull voice transmissions are consistently
mis-interpreted by psychiatrists as 'schizophrenia', getting this information
to the public needs concerted attention.

Inventor Elwood Norris, and his small company, (American Technology
Corp., Poway CA) have designed a market ready device called an "acoustical
heterodyne".

This device sends out two sound signals in the ultrasonic (above-human-hearing)
range which, when they impact a surface, which may be a living creature,
then and only then produce a sound at a frequency equal to the DIFFERENCE
("heterodyne") of the two ultrasound frequencies.

** This technology has been used extensively by harassers who follow
a walking or driving victim and bounce raucous, unnatural bird calls and
other strange sounds off surfaces near the victim. This type of sound is
tape recordable.

This article, with photos supplied by Millitech Corporation, describes
recently unclassified "millimeter wave" cameras (and some other see- thru
technologies less well developed.)

These units operate like camcorders, giving the user a real-time thru-clothing,
thru- luggage image for detecting weapons and drugs.

Technology like this does not just pop out of nowhere overnight, and
it probably has its roots in the 1960's classified microwave weapon "renaissance"
- about the same time as the U.S. embassy staff in Moscow discovered they
were being bathed in Soviet microwave signals.

OEM Magazine, February 1997, page 20 "Electronic Dipstick" article

This article describes "micropower impulse radar" or "MIR" radar, developed
at Lawrence Livermore Lab in California, and licensed to several large
companies for consumer products. Basically, this radar uses the highest
radio frequencies and does not require the supporting hardware like rotary
antennas which 'conventional' radar does.

** Thru the wall radar has been covertly used for a number of years
on weapons testing victims. One common use has been to detect where the
victim is standing or walking in their apartment, and 'follow' the victim's
position by rapping floor, walls, or ceiling from an adjacent apt. This
is designed to let the victim know he/she is under constant surveillance.

4. Defense Electronics, July 1993, page 17

DOD, INTEL AGENCIES LOOK AT RUSSIAN MIND CONTROL CLAIMS

Federal law enforcement officials considered testing a Russian scientist's
acoustic mind control device on cultist David Koresh a few weeks before
the fiery conflagration that killed the Branch Davidian leader and 70 of
his followers in Waco, Texas, DEFENSE ELECTRONICS has learned.

In a series of closed meetings beginning March 17 in suburban northern
Virginia with Dr. Igor Smirnov of the Moscow Medical Academy, FBI officials
were briefed on the Russian's decade- long research on a computerized acoustic
device allegedly capable of implanting thoughts in a person's mind without
that person being aware of the source of the thought.

His account of the meetings was confirmed by Psychotechnologies Corp.,
a Richmond, Virginia based firm that owns the American rights to the Russian
technology.

[Not necessarily unclassified, but at least made known to a limited
segment of the public]

5. Dan Rather's CBS Evening News, Dec. 9, 1997

Police helicopters were the topic, and one of the features soon to be
added to police heli- copters was "an electromagnetic ray gun which can
stop speeding cars dead."

While this is primitive technology compared with that used to manipulate
the minds and nervous systems of e-weapons victims of the 1990's, it does
demonstrate quite clearly that government is putting substantial re- sources
into electromagnetic weapons devel- opment.

During part of the show, it was stated that the current development
of polygraphs (lie detectors) using massive computer-aided database comparisons
was now a reality and these machines were making substantial progress towards
near- perfect accuracy.

The final statement in that segment was: It is expected that the next
stage in polygraph devel- opment will be REMOTE MICROWAVE detection of
bodily functions, which will mean the polygraph can then be used SECRETLY,
at a distance.

7. Associated Press: (Dec. 2, 1997)

TOKYO - Tired of reaching for the remote control every time you surf
the channels? Help is on the way - at a price. A Japanese company plans
to market a device that changes television channels and activates household
appliances at the flicker of a brain wave. The price: roughly 600,000 yen
($4,800). The product, called the Mind Control Tool Operating System, or
MCTOS, is the result of a collaboration between the Technos Japan Co. and
the Himeji Institute of Technology in southwestern Japan.

Say you want to turn on the air conditioner. Simply focus on that icon
on the MCTOS computer display menu while wearing a pair of beta-wave trapping
goggles. Then, according to Technos spokesman Sadahiro Ushitani, say something
like "Ei!!" inside your head. Soon your air conditioner will be pumping
cool air into the room.

MCTOS is scheduled to go on sale in April, 1998.

8. On Jan. 19 the Washington Post had an article about a device for
remotely detecting heartbeats by detecting the electromagnetic pulses emitted
by beating hearts.

"The pumping of the human heart is controlled by electrical signals,
which doctors measure in electrocardiograms. The heart's activity generates
an irregular, ultralow-frequency electric field that extends in a circle
around the body.

"The field is faint, but it can pass through almost any physical barrier.
The LifeGuard can pick up on the strongest part of the field, the heart,
through barriers including concrete walls, heavy foliage and rocks. Company
officials say the LifeGuard can detect a person in less than five seconds
and can pinpoint his or her location with a high degree of accuracy."

The company is marketing the device for potentially locating people
in need of rescue, or detecting where individuals are located inside a
building.

(PARIS - Pasteur Institute - Speech by Chairman of the French national
bioethics committee Jean-Pierre Changeaux)

"But neuroscience also poses potential risks, arguing that advances
in cerebral imaging make the scope for invasion of privacy immense.

"Although the equipment needed is still highly spec- ialized, it will
become commonplace and capable of being used at a distance, he predicted.
That will open the way for abuses such as invasion of personal liberty,
control of behaviour, and brainwashing."

"These are far from being science-fiction concerns, said Changeaux,
and constitute a serious risk to society."

Also in that article:

"Denis LeBihan, a researcher at the French Atomic Energy Commission,
told the meeting that the use of imaging techniques has reached the stage
where we can almost read people's thoughts."

NOTE: These scientists are speaking ONLY about the UNCLASSIFIED scientific
arena. Classified technology can always be assumed well ahead of unclassified.